Ben Brown
Six Years Later: Katrina Cottages take hold
August 11 will be a landmark day in the South Mississippi communities still recovering from the 2005 mega-storm, Hurricane Katrina. And it’s about time.
On that day next week, 18 days shy of the sixth anniversary of the storm, the development team behind the Cottages at Oak Park in Ocean Springs, Mississippi, will... Continue Reading
So Much to Do: Sadly, so much time
Time is not on our side. And that earth-shattering insight works in two directions.
The most obvious is the situation most of us face each day, with ever-expanding to-do lists colliding with obstinate time frames. Same old days, with the same old number of hours in them.
But here’s the deal with a to-do list: What... Continue Reading
Category Planning and Design, Public Policy
Well, Bless Their Hearts: Now can we move on?
Next week, the 19th annual gathering of New Urbanism cultists takes place in Madison, Wisconsin. I’m one of them, and I’m sorry not to be making the Congress this year. This has the feel of one of those turning-point moments.
First, the good part. A lot more folks have bought into the New Urbanist perspective for... Continue Reading
Category Architecture, Planning and Design
Get Real or Get Rich: Lessons for an era of limited trust
It’s a great time to be really rich or really smart.
It’s never hurt, of course, to be able to tap into big bucks or big brains. It’s just that penalties for having access to neither are rising dramatically.
What got me to thinking in this direction was an exhaustive investigative report in last Sunday’s... Continue Reading
Category Public Policy
“Sustainability” is so ten years ago — Let’s talk “Resilience”
Deep in an April 14 New York Times story on the aftermath of the Japanese earthquake and tsunami was mention of an iPhone app called Yurekuru that gives warning of an impending quake. The name, said the Times, translates into English roughly as, “the shaking is coming.”
Before the March 11 quake, the app attracted... Continue Reading
Category Public Policy, Resilience
Everything is Multiplied: Social media as tool, threat and total waste of time
So I’m checking out the debut of the Onion News Network and two things occurred to me:
First, sadly for the Onion writers, cable news is inoculated against parody. What passes for news and analysis on most cable shows satirizes itself. Hence Jon Stewart’s brilliant strategy of curating and juxtaposing actual news... Continue Reading
Category Public Engagement, Sales and Marketing
Good News: The End Is Near. Really.
More than three decades ago, sociologist Ernest Becker published The Denial of Death which made the argument that the fear of death, in all its irrevocability and finality, provides a unifying, baseline reality for humans.
We may be overwhelmed and confused by an increasing number of competing “truths,” wrote Becker,... Continue Reading
Category Public Policy
The Revolution Will Not be Organized (But the food and drink will be pretty good)
It’s officially over.
The flush era for planners and designers, when utopian villages and new towns could grow from dreams and piles of private sector cash? Long gone. Now comes the revolution.
What the revolt will look like is under debate. And not surprisingly, the most intense discussions are joined by those... Continue Reading
Category Development, Planning and Design
Livin’ Large in Small Spaces: It Takes a Town
I’m big on small.
Ever since the 2005 Misissippi Renewal Forum in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, I’ve been beating the drum for Katrina Cottages and cottage neighborhoods. Most recently here and, in 2009, here.
I haven’t exactly been a voice in the wilderness. In fact, I wasn’t even among the early wave of... Continue Reading
Season’s Greetings from Alabama: Where Stars Aligned
Here’s a story of hope for the holidays. And like most good stories, it begins with bad news.
On April 20, BP’s Deepwater Horizon oil well in the Gulf of Mexico exploded, killing 11 of its 126 rig workers. That was the first tragedy. Then, came the second, as oil from the uncapped well began spilling into the Gulf. Continue Reading
Category Public Engagement, Public Policy